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Militia U.
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Oct. 21, 1999 |
Due to the violence in East Timor after its vote for independence from Indonesia, President Clinton made the ruling in September. But unless the government intervenes in the business of the private 1,000-student military college, the students will finish their four-year course of studies at the 1,000-student college and return to Indonesia for a compulsory 10-year military stint. They list their address in Jakarta as the headquarters of Kopassus, the army's elite forces alleged by Human Rights Watch to have committed the most atrocious of acts against the East Timorese. All U.S. training of Indonesian soldiers has been curtailed at public military schools. But Norwich's private status -- like any private school, it needn't follow the rules of state universities -- means that so far it has been exempt from the U.S. policy. Founded by West Point superintendent Capt. Alden Partridge in 1819, Norwich is the only private military school in the country. Though it receives no government funds, ROTC instructors -- active duty military officers selected and paid by the Pentagon -- teach many of the classes. "The Pentagon said we're in compliance with the law. So did the White House," said Thomas Greene, spokesman for Norwich University in a recent interview. How is it that the United States is at once suspending military relations with Indonesia -- a nation that only yesterday, amid chaos, voted for its next president -- and continuing to allow the training of Indonesian soldiers for its elite forces? It all pivots on the current status of the future warriors: The Indonesian students are not yet technically soldiers. Chosen from high school to attend Norwich by the Indonesian government, the 13 students (in addition to the 11 from Kopassus, two others without known links to Indonesia's elite forces attend the school) still qualify as ordinary citizens. With money from its military, the Indonesian Embassy in Washington foots the $20,000- Pentagon spokesman Lt. Commander Anthony Cooper has said that all Indonesian military students in Department of Defense (DOD) schools have been asked to leave: "There were some Indonesian military officials that had to return home once the decision was made -- a few graduated from a Naval post-graduate school in Monterey just before the suspension," he explained. According to Cooper, DOD schools do not train officers for combat. Instead they offer courses in human and civil rights, disaster relief and professional career training such as public affairs. But for some, the current severing of relations has not gone far enough -- especially since the Pentagon can lift the suspension at any time. To rectify what they see as an overly lax policy, Sens. Russell Feingold, D-Wis., Jesse Helms, R-N.C., and Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., introduced legislature in early October that would suspend U.S.-Indonesian military cooperation across the board. The new bill encompasses all military programs -- from private training at Norwich to non-DOD programs like the FBI and CIA. Under this bill, the suspension would be lifted only after the army leaves Timor and returns some 300,000 refugees to their homelands. "The Senate bill has strong bipartisan support," said Lynn Fredriksson of the East Timor Action Network. "We believe this will affect ROTC instruction at Norwich." Leahy, who has been a staunch supporter of East Timor's independence, recently helped the private military academy secure funds for a new armory to be built on campus. "I have the highest respect for Norwich University," he said, "but I do not support direct or indirect assistance or benefits to the Indonesian army."
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